No, that won't work, you only get to see the cutscene once, after you die, you just enter the boss fight with Sif already aggro'd and ready to fight. No cutscene whatsoever. This is how most of the boss fights work. If you want, just watch the original on youtube, then check out the DLC alternate in your game. Or, if you plan on playing this game a lot more, just do it on another playthrough.

I am somewhat curious how to do this DLC. I've heard you can tackle this AoTA during the Dark Souls timeline and it will give you a different cut scene before fighting Sif. My question is could I get myself killed by Sif (suicide) to see the original cut scene and then run and do AoTA and then go back and finally kill Sif (in hopes to get the new cut scene)? Has anyone started a new character to try this and what SL is best to tackle AoTA if I were to start a new character?

So I guess Im the only crazy duder who started a brand new character to get to the new stuff :P (in reality my other character ws also at the beginning so I said eff it Im starting over) so I think I willo suffer a lot of deaths

@princess_zelda i agree that Sanctuary Guardian was the easiest, but it made most sense for me to talk about him heh. Also, I had just returned to the game for the first time in several months and was on NG++ O_O.

Somehow I beat Sanctuary Guardian on my first try. Used Dragonslayer Spear. My second playthrough I died to him a lot because I wanted his tail. It was fun, but I haven't had the frustrating experience most seem to have had. Beating Manus however, was one of the most triumphant moments in the whole game for me.

I just got it as well, and I love it. I've still got Kalameet and Manus to beat and I already wish there was more :(. I recently learned that you can summon Sif to help you fight Manus though, which is just fucking awesome.

As for sanctuary guardian, he was a pain, but once I memorized his move set he was pretty easy, if a little long. Same with Artorias, but I loved that fight.

Those new mage fuckers that shoot the dark bolts are total bullshit though.

If there even is a proper word for the confusing mixture of emotions I felt in the first 30 minutes of booting up the long-awaited add-on to last year's utterly exhilarating Dark Souls, it's not in my repertoire. What I do know, is I was immediately struck with a very profound childlike excitement that had me giddy, all due to the fact I was simply doing something new. Having spent well over 200 hours exploring the dense, beautiful and wholly unique world FromSoftware had granted me last year, I pretty much knew everything you could about Dark Souls proper. Every pressure-plate triggered trap, every well-hidden enemy, every nonsense attack a boss could throw at me. Every single obstacle the game could lay on me I had painfully experienced, triumphantly overcome, and gloriously mastered.

But not today. Today, I was walking down a new corridor. It looked familiar, sure. Still a part of Lordran, the over-world the game exists in that I had come to love. But never before had I been down a tunnel that looked just like this, that snaked in this exact fashion, that finally come out into this specific sunlit plateau. And just as all of these pleasant feelings crescendoed in what was beginning to seem like such a sweet song, I met the Sanctuary Guardian.

For a surprisingly large (and questionably masochistic) fan-base as dedicated to collecting souls as I am, the eagerly awaited Artorias of the Abyss content is a breath of fresh air. The newly added story-arch and accompanying sub-world didn't even need to be amazing, it just needed to be more Dark Souls. Thankfully, however, it's pretty special.

In typical Souls fashion, the minor story throughout the new content is vague (and really only told through optional dialogue with it's morbid, defeated charaters) but as effective as ever and covered in a surprise sci-fi sheen.

After being seized by a giant, ugly hand belonging to what could only belong to some hulking monster, you arrive in the abyss plagued land of Oolacile, home to a few foil characters from the main game. You quickly discover you've not only travelled in terms of distance, but also back in time (around the events that provided as reason for the former Oolacile residents to have abandoned their land in the first place) to aid in the fight against the abyss swallowing everything it can.

Even though there are a couple new NPC's (one being especially badass) to interact with and some decent story beats, Souls fan know what it is they want from AOTA. The DLC-only boss fights are just as remarkable as the originals (the highlight being Knight Artorias) and the new loot adds, at the very least, some new tools to take charge with.

The only issue I ever had with the new content is that it didn't quite feel like something we've been waiting a year for. It's so incredibly streamlined into the main game that if someone was to start the original already having purchased the new content, they probably wouldn't realize at what point they had crossed over. I have no doubt that FromSoftware considers this a triumph. To have expected post-Gwyn content would have been foolish. The original game made sense. You had learned early on what your goal was, and by the end you had completed it.That was your story. But having spent a year roaming the same areas over and over again for the past 12 months made me want something a little more dramatic. The creators had painted themselves into a corner.

Many frustrating deaths after my initial introduction to the Sanctuary Guardian, I finally beat him. I had memorized his lengthy set of attacks, discovered which of mine were most effective, and decided exactly what must be done. And as I stood above his rapidly deteriorating corpse with a broken weapon, without potions, heart racing at 200bpm and poisoned, i collapsed alongside him. It was such a perfect moment, sitting by myself in my dark apartment, the previous 30 minutes of anger overwhelmed by a new sense of accomplishment that I laughed out loud to myself, respawned, and ran ahead in search of my next death.